Akram Zaatari

Akram Zaatari has produced more than forty films and videos, a dozen books, and countless installations of photographic material, all pursuing a range of interconnected themes, subjects, and practices related to excavation, political resistance, the lives of former militants, the legacy of an exhausted left, intimacies among men, the circulation of images in times of war, and the play of tenses inherent to various letters that have been lost, found, buried, discovered, or otherwise delayed in reaching their destinations. Zaatari has played a critical role in developing the formal, intellectual, and institutional infrastructure of Beirut’s contemporary art scene. He was one of a handful of young artists who emerged from the delirious but short-lived era of experimentation in Lebanon’s television industry, which was radically reorganized after the country’s civil war. As a co-founder of the Arab Image Foundation, a groundbreaking, artist-driven organization devoted to the research and study of photography in the region, he has made invaluable and uncompromising contributions to the wider discourse on photography and its disintegration, preservation and archival practice. Zaatari has been focusing since 2004 on studying the archive of studio photographer Hashem el Madani, who founded studio Shehrazade in Saida, where Zaatari filmed his last feature Twenty Eight Nights and A Poem (2015).

Zaatari represented Lebanon at the Venice biennale 2013. He has shown his films, videos, photographs, and other documents in institutions such as the Centre Pompidou in Paris, MoMA in NY, Tate Modern in London, Modern Museet in Stockholm, Macba in Barcelona and Kunsthaus Zurich. He has taken part of Documenta13 (2012), the biennials of Gwangju, Liverpool, Istanbul, Sao Paulo and Sydney.

His films have screened at the Berlinale, FID Marseille, Rotterdam, Toronto, and Oberhausen film festivals.

1966

born in Saida, Lebanon

lives in Beirut

Selected Solo Exhibitions

2017

Against Photography. An Annotated History of the Arab Image Foundation, MACBA, Barcelona Unfolding, Galerie Sfeir-Semler, HamburgDouble Take: Akram Zaatari and the Arab Image Foundation, National Portrait Gallery, London